Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

kingdom\tcell type\tcell #\tcell wall\tlocomotion\tfeeding type archaeb…

Question

kingdom\tcell type\tcell #\tcell wall\tlocomotion\tfeeding type
archaebacteria \extremophiles\

bacteria

protista \junk drawer kingdom\

fungi

plantae

animalia

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

This table requires filling in key characteristics of each biological kingdom based on core biological classification knowledge:

  1. Archaebacteria: Are prokaryotic (no nucleus), single-celled, have cell walls made of pseudopeptidoglycan, some use flagella for movement, and can be autotrophic or heterotrophic.
  2. Bacteria: Also prokaryotic, single-celled, have peptidoglycan cell walls, many use flagella for locomotion, and include autotrophic and heterotrophic types.
  3. Protista: Eukaryotic (have a nucleus), can be single or multi-celled; some have cell walls (like algae with cellulose, slime molds without), use structures like cilia, flagella, or amoeboid movement, and include autotrophic, heterotrophic, and mixotrophic organisms.
  4. Fungi: Eukaryotic, mostly multi-celled (yeast are single-celled), have chitin cell walls, no locomotion (spores disperse passively), and are heterotrophic (absorptive feeding).
  5. Plantae: Eukaryotic, multi-celled, have cellulose cell walls, no locomotion (sessile), and are autotrophic (photosynthetic).
  6. Animalia: Eukaryotic, multi-celled, no cell walls, use muscles, cilia, flagella, or limbs for locomotion, and are heterotrophic (ingestive feeding).

Answer:

KingdomCell TypeCell #Cell WallLocomotionFeeding Type
BacteriaProkaryoticUnicellularPeptidoglycanFlagella (many)Autotrophic/Heterotrophic
Protista <br> "Junk Drawer Kingdom"EukaryoticUnicellular/MulticellularCellulose (some), none (others)Cilia, flagella, amoeboid movementAutotrophic/Heterotrophic/Mixotrophic
FungiEukaryoticMostly multicellular (yeast: unicellular)ChitinNone (spore dispersal passive)Heterotrophic (absorptive)
PlantaeEukaryoticMulticellularCelluloseNone (sessile)Autotrophic (photosynthetic)
AnimaliaEukaryoticMulticellularNoneMuscles, cilia, limbs, flagellaHeterotrophic (ingestive)